Simulation study on purification efficiency for nitrogen in different types of wetlands in Sanjiang Plain, China

2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 252-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yue Guo ◽  
Ming Jiang ◽  
Xianguo Lu
2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijaya Perumalla ◽  
B. Seetha Ramanjaneyulu ◽  
Ashok Kolli

Time-Slotted Channel hopping (TSCH) that was introduced in IEEE802.15.4e is a promising technique to offer deterministic data deliveries in Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN). Its main strength lies in using multiple channels for the transmissions, using frequency hopping method. However, it takes more time for initializing the network, as beacons have to be released on multiple frequencies and scanning needs to be carried out by the devices in all those frequencies for joining the network. In this work, a simulation study is carried out to investigate the effect of these delays for different types of multihop networks. The benefit of introducing multiple coordinators in reducing these time delays is also studied. It is found that the delays are increasing linearly with the number of hops in the network and adding an additional coordinator can bring down the initialization time by half.


2010 ◽  
Vol 133 (13) ◽  
pp. 134502 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Y. Zasetsky ◽  
Svetlana V. Petelina ◽  
Andrey K. Lyashchenko ◽  
Alexander S. Lileev

2017 ◽  
Vol 46 (2) ◽  
pp. 19-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingwer Borg ◽  
Patrick Mair

Multidimensional scaling (MDS) algorithms can easily end up in local minima, depending on the starting configuration. This is particularly true for 2-dimensional ordinal MDS. A simulation study shows that there can be many local minima that all have an excellent model fit (i.e., small Stress) even if they do not recover a known latent configuration very well, and even if they differ substantially among each other. MDS programs give the user only one supposedly Stress-optimal solution. We here present a procedure for analyzing all MDS solutions resulting from using a variety of different starting configurations. The solutions are compared in terms of fit and configurational similarity. This allows the MDS user to identify different types of solutions with acceptable Stress, if they exist, and then pick the one that is best interpretable.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brennan C. Kahan ◽  
Ian R. White ◽  
Sandra Eldridge ◽  
Richard Hooper

Abstract Background Re-randomisation trials involve re-enrolling and re-randomising patients for each new treatment episode they experience. They are often used when interest lies in the average effect of an intervention across all the episodes for which it would be used in practice. Re-randomisation trials are often analysed using independence estimators, where a working independence correlation structure is used. However, research into independence estimators in the context of re-randomisation has been limited. Methods We performed a simulation study to evaluate the use of independence estimators in re-randomisation trials. We focussed on a continuous outcome, and the setting where treatment allocation does not affect occurrence of subsequent episodes. We evaluated different treatment effect mechanisms (e.g. by allowing the treatment effect to vary across episodes, or to become less effective on re-use, etc), and different non-enrolment mechanisms (e.g. where patients who experience a poor outcome are less likely to re-enrol for their second episode). We evaluated four different independence estimators, each corresponding to a different estimand (per-episode and per-patient approaches, and added-benefit and policy-benefit approaches). Results We found that independence estimators were unbiased for the per-episode added-benefit estimand in all scenarios we considered. We found independence estimators targeting other estimands (per-patient or policy-benefit) were unbiased, except when there was differential non-enrolment between treatment groups (i.e. when different types of patients from each treatment group decide to re-enrol for subsequent episodes). We found the use of robust standard errors provided close to nominal coverage in all settings where the estimator was unbiased. Conclusions Careful choice of estimand can ensure re-randomisation trials are addressing clinically relevant questions. Independence estimators are a useful approach, and should be considered as the default estimator until the statistical properties of alternative estimators are thoroughly evaluated.


Author(s):  
ELIZABETH ANN MAHARAJ

In this paper, a procedure for comparing the patterns of time series using wavelets is developed. Randomization tests based on the ratio of the sum of squared wavelet coefficients of pairs of time series at different scales are used. A simulation study using pairs of different types of time series using the Haar and Daubechies wavelets is carried out. The results reveal that the tests perform fairly well at scales where there are a sufficient number of wavelet coefficients. The tests are applied to a set of financial time series.


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